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Muslim-sunni
Khalifa claimed that he was a messenger(rasool) of God and that the Archangel Gabriel 'most assertively' told him that chapter 36, verse 3, of the Quran, 'specifically' referred to him.[4][5] His followers refer to him as God's Messenger of the Covenant.[6] He promoted a strict Monotheism and was a prominent Quranist, rejecting the Hadith and Sunnah as fabrications attributed to prophet Muhammad by later scholars. He is most notable for his claim that the Quran contains a mathematical structure based on the number 19 [7] and making the highly controversial claim that the last two the verses of chapter nine in the Quran were not canonical, telling his followers to reject them.[8]
Starting in 1968, Khalifa used computers to analyze the frequency of letters and words in the Qur'an.[1] In 1974, he claimed that he had discovered a mathematical code in the text of the Qur'an involving the number 19. The details of this analysis are available in his book, Quran, the Final Testament.[9]
Khalifa's research did not receive much attention in the West. In 1980, Martin Gardner mentioned it in Scientific American.[10] Gardner later wrote a more extensive and critical review of Khalifa and his work.[11]
Khalifa's first publicized report in the Arab world appeared in the Egyptian magazine Akher Sa'a, in January, 1973.[12] Updates of his research were subsequently published by the same magazine later that year and again in 1975.[13][14]
On May 20, 2007, in Daily News Egypt, an article entitled "Scholars discover the secret code of the Quran" was published.[15
ja ne wikipedia ku shkrun se ka pohu qe asht profet o kafir ndoshta as kjo nuk te duket argument
ju vet po e mohoni kuranin
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